> Is there a way for a novice to do a complete vacuum check of the > engine to make sure there is none???....I thought i read once where someone > sprayed wd-40 at various parts of the engine and listened for engine > improvment but this seems to hit or miss....Is there a better way? Mike, It probably wasn't WD-40 that they used. What people use is starting fluid (mostly ether in a spray can). It evaporates almost immediately and gets sucked into the vacuum leak where it then burns in the engine as fuel. When it burns, it engine runs faster (like it got more fuel) and tells you that you just found the leak. I replaced a thermostat on a friend's DeLorean and had to remove the rams-horns to get at it. We put "vendor supplied" new paper gaskets that weren't thick enough (or the gasket surfaces were too warped.) When we put it back together, the resulting vacuum leak vibrated the gasket like the reed in a wind instrument. It was LOUD! We kept wondering, "What the hell is making that noise?" I was really hard to tell were it was coming from. I sprayed a little oil on there and it quit. So we made new gaskets out of a thicker material. Problem solved. Probably the most common vacuum leak that I've seen people living with is the tamper-proof cap for the fuel mixture adjustment. Some dummy removes this plug, messes with the adjustment and never reseals the hole. This leaves a significant vacuum leak. The next most likely leak is a hose that got pulled off or rotted off. When I first got my car, the vacuum line going from the a/c mode switch to the heater valve was pulled loose. I could hear it hissing in the console. It was a bad enough leak that it affected how the engine ran. I suggest just poking through all the vacuum lines in the engine compartment & compare to the vacuum routing label under the engine cover. Make sure they are all going somewhere and are secure. Some of them are impossible to reach without disassembling part of the engine, so don't go pulling at the ones that go to the rear of the engine. If one of those is pulled loose, it is hard to tell. You can listen for a hiss, but you have to know what to listen for. I tested mine by hooking a hand vacuum pump with a gauge to look for leaks. I pulled various hoses loose and drew a vacuum to make sure it held. Walt To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: DMCForum-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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